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South America: Peru


 

Map of Peru

 

Current Crop Comments:

Despite all the mediocre Peru samples I have waded through, I think we have done really well with our offerings the past 2 years. Our current stock of Peru Ccochapampa from the Quillabamba area of Cuzco is excellent. There is no question Peru has the altitude, and the ability. The issue is whether a dedication to cup quality exists, or whether Peru will go for the title as low-price Organic source, competing with Mexico. Now we have micro-lot coffees from farms I have visited the past year and the hope to work with these small farmers and coops in the future.

 

Organic Peru ... you can get it anywhere now. It is usually the cheapest certified Organic coffee on the market, it's the "blender" coffee of Organics, it's $4/Lb. roasted at Trader Joes. And it is threatening to lower prices for organic coffee farmers globally. The Peruvian coffee industry took note of the premium prices paid for Organic coffee, and realized they could produce Organic for less cost, focusing on quantity, not quality. They wanted to be to Organic coffee what Vietnam is to robusta. There are stories of forest being clear-cut for organic farm (it takes 3 years for an existing farm to become certified organic... not so with a "new" farm. I doubt the image of cutting forest to grow organic product is an image consumers have in mind ... then again, it's Organic and it's $4 per lb. roasted. Well, you get what you pay for. The problem is, the Peruvian organic coffee glut forces quality-oriented farmers within Peru and everywhere else too to accept lower prices for their crop in order to compete. And a farm that is trying to produce a truly excellent coffee in a conscientious way cannot compete with a larger quantity-oriented farm, whether its a co-op or not. Cup a Trader Joe's organic Peru versus a high quality Organic Peru and the differences are profound: not only do the cheap ones have little to no positive qualities, they also have defective taints in the cup, grassy, fermenty notes in particular.

Okay, I am a little cynical about Peruvian coffee. It's not because there aren't good lots though. They do exist and it takes some detective work to find them. After all, Peru is a hugely varied land and they produce a lot of different coffees. It's the land of the Incas and by most measures a latecomer in the modern world coffee trade. Peruvian offerings are hardly mentioned in William Ukers 1936 edition of All About Coffee and have not been well thought of due to an indelicate, blunted acidity that doesn't have the refinement of the Centrals. I think a lot of this is historical bias because Peru can produce some very fine coffees. In general, these coffees have Central American brightness but in a South American coffee flavor package overall. The good organic lots do have more of a "rustic" coffee character. As long as it is kept in check and does not dominate the cup, this can add interest to the flavor rather than detract. The cup has it all, body, brightness and good depth in the flavors. While there are still mediocre arrivals, it doesn't take much cupping to find a really good one. The Chanchamayo is usually (but not necessarily) the top region, but good Norte and Cuzco from the south are out there. Buy the first Peru you are offered and you are bound for cup troubles. Poorly processed coffee, coffee with defects, might fool the cupper at first, but 2 months down the line the coffee fades, the acidity fails, baggy flavors emerge, and you know you made a bad decision. It's a lot of work to find a good lot among the abundance offered by brokers and other channels, and it takes slogging through a lot of samples to find them though. But hey, it's better slogging through samples at a cupping table than stacks of paper at a desk!


Quechua herders I encountered on the road from Cuzco to Quillabamba


Big Typica varietal coffee cherry, the cultivar used most in Peru


The coffee "A-Frame" which helps small-scale farmers chose correct coffee plant spacing and calculate land slope!

Our Peruvian Coffee Offerings: Please refer to our Reference Page for definitions of terms and cupping numbers used below


Peru FTO Cuzco - Ccochapampa Coop
Country: Peru Grade: SHG Region: Cuzco State, Quillabamba Area Mark: Ccochapampa Coop, Cocla Coop
Processing: Wet Process Crop: October 2007 Arrival Appearance: .4 d/300gr, 18 Screen Varietal: Typica, Caturra
Dry Fragrance (1-5) 3.5 Notes: I have already ranted other places about the poor quality of some organic Peru coffees: Cup a supermarket organic Peru versus a high quality organic Peru and the differences are profound. Not only do the cheap ones have little to no positive qualities, they also have defective taints in the cup, grassy, fermenty notes in particular. These are the hallmarks of unripe coffee cherry (poor picking and separation of fruit) and poor wet-milling standards. Anyway, this particular lot was the hands-down winner among the Perus this year to date, and among the other lots from this same co-op (COCLA). Ccochapampa is in the Cuzco region (south-central Peru): the co-op is located near the town of Quillabamba. The co-op has 150 small-holder farms, and the unusually-spelled Ccochapampa means "plain by the lake" in the Quechua language. The coffee area is between 1600 and 2000 meters, adjacent to the snow-covered peak known as Veronica, which feeds river Vilcanota that is fed year-round by snow-melt. (No, the "Cc" is not a typo!) The dry fragrance is surprisingly nutty with milk chocolate roast tones. But adding the hot water results in a burst of herbal-floral aromatics, suggestions of pungent spice, and chocolate. The cup has a good bittersweet zent to it, and the accent notes I have mentioned, spice (warming spice) and herbs are present too. There's a waxy mouthfeel that combines well with the chocolate in the cup, not a heavy body but viscuous still, and it reminds me of a character I get in some Mexico Oaxaca coffees. Since both are pure Typica cultivar, I wonder if it might be a character of that specific varietal. I like this cup: it has the brightness of Centrals, but a rustic tendency in the cup flavors that gives it a slightly earthy edge.
Wet Aroma (1-5) 3.6
Brightness - Acidity (1-10) 8.6
Flavor - Depth (1-10) 8.7
Body - Movement (1-5) 3.2
Finish - Aftertaste (1-10) 8.7
Cupper's Correction (1-5) 0 Intensity/Prime Attribute: Medium intensity / Spice, herbal-floral accents  
add 50 50 Roast: C+ to FC+. Your C+ roasts will have a nutty accent whereas FC+ will tend toward chocolate. It's a versatile coffee, and can also be taken to Vienna and French with good results
Score (Max. 100) 86.3 Compare to: Has some flavor aspects of Cauca coffees from Colombia, and the brightness of a Central, but with a rustic accent.

This review kept here for reference purposes - this coffee is sold out - Maria 4/29/08

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This is the closest I'll ever get to winning. The winning farm was from the Lamas region, Andres Soberon Gonzales. In general, the coffees were not as dazzling as Cusco and Puno region coffees, but they were sweet, and balanced. Andres' coffee was a clearcut winner, with 10 of 11 judges ranking it in the top categories, and certainly Specialty Coffee.
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Los Cinco Ganadores for the Concurso Regional de Cafe de Calidad. Well, there's just a trace of a smile there somewhere. Really I know these guys were, as we say in Cali, "stoked". From Left: 5th -Ramiro Barrantes Davila from Lamas, 4th -Fermin Clemente Ruffino from Tingo Maria, 1st -Andres Soberon Gnzales from Lamas, 2nd - Eugenio Anselmo Pacheco from Tingo Maria 3rd - Evaristo Vargas Cruz from Tingo Maria

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